Showing posts with label documentary film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label documentary film. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Global Girl Media and South Africa World Cup Launch!

It's only five months to the WORLD CUP! Vuvuleza!!! And Global Girl will be there! If you're a World Cup fan, a lover of South Africa, a global perspective-type, a media-maker, a girl soccer player, a girl with a camera, or a girl with something to say, log onto http://uniteglobalgirls.ning.com and become a GLOBAL GIRL!

A Global Girl believes in her voice and the
power of her story to change the world.

Global Girl Media is a powerful new non-profit organization whose mission is to nurture the voice and visions of young girls in under-served communities and developing nations, training them as citizen broadcast journalists to speak out about the issues that affect them most. The notion that anyone anywhere can access the world through media is becoming a reality, yet for most people in Africa and other developing countries, a rather slow process. While the internet and emerging technologies offer unprecedented opportunities for organizing and activism, the fact remains that this media is only open to those who have access, leaving many youth, especially girls falling hard into the “digital divide.” Media and the production of media feels like a world away to most young women (the number of working professional female film/video directors on the entire African continent is less than 10).

Global Girl Media (GGM) seeks to address this disparity by supplying the equipment, education and support necessary to help young women create content that authentically reflects their lives and communities. However, GGM does more than give girls the skills they need to create original media, we make sure it’s seen. Our cutting-edge interactive website is a place where girls can upload their videos and watch videos submitted by girls all around the world.

Global Girl Media’s pilot project, KICK IT UP! is launching in June, 2010 and we need your help! Our goal is to train 20 girls in the historic township of Soweto, South Africa to cover the FIFA World Cup, held for the first time on the African Continent. Many consider the World Cup to be a male-centered event, but we know better! The Global Girls in Soweto will produce unique videos and new media content for digital upload and distribution on the web, which can then be shared with the worldwide broadcast community. Spearheaded by our fabulous celebrity spokesperson, Julie Foudy (former US Women's Soccer Team Capt. and two-time gold medalist, she is now a sportscaster for ESPN), the girls will be mentored by Julie and granted full access to all FIFA events.In addition, we will be working with several girls’ organizations in Los Angeles, where Global Girl Media is based, to develop peer-to-peer communication during the World Cup, encouraging girls to connect, blog, upload and share video about their favorite teams, players, their relationship to sports, and specific personal struggles and goals.

Research clearly shows, that both sport and media can become effective agents for self-empowerment, team-building and social change. This is what Global Girl Media is all about. By connecting girls around the world through social media, a powerful cross-cultural connection can be developed that has a far-reaching effect, changing lives, communities, fostering Girl Media is also working with many strategic partners, both in South Africa and the United States to develop the program and get the work the girls’ produce the broadest exposure possible.

If you are another non-profit, website, high school club, sports club or like-minded individual that understands the power of girls and media, please give us a call, visit our website or ning site, and lets all celebrate the voices of young women the world over.

As Nick Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn wrote in their landmark book, Half the Sky, “Changing the lives of women and girls in the developing world can change everything. The world is awakening to a powerful truth. Women and girls aren't the problem; they're the solution.”




Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Help Support African Film!

And apologies in advance for being one of those starving artists begging on the internet, But...here goes...

I do need your vote, after all!

I am in the semi-finals of the ultimate filmmakers' competition for films such as my film, JUA KALI: HARSH SUN, set in Kenya, featuring an all-African cast and mostly African crew!
We have the endorsement of the Kenyan Government through the Kenyan Film Commission as well.

Well, it's not a film yet—but it could be, and it could be this year, if you'll vote for it. The prize is $500,000, enough to produce the film. The project was chosen from 2500 entrants, made the quarterfinals of 250, and now the semi-finals which is down to just 23 filmmakers.

I wrote the script for it and have been working on it for what seems like a lifetime. It's about recent post-election violence in Kenya, told through the eyes of a young Kenyan girl, who brings a powerful message of hope to her ravaged community.

You can see footage I shot for this for the Film Independent's Director's Lab
on the site-- It features the actors Idris Elba ("The Wire" and "Obsessed") and Eddie Gathegi ("Twilight"). I recently shot additional footage in Soweto where I was training young women to become journalists to cover the 2010 World Cup.

But whether or not you vote for me or other worthy projects in the semi0finals, I implore you, please visit the website—the link to it is below—and VOTE!

It's easy: click on the link, vote, and pass along the link to all your friends. Tweet, facebook, whatever.
PASSING IT ALONG IS KEY!

Here's the link: www.ultimatefilmmakercompetition.com

Dont forget to check your email for confirmation of the vote,
which may go to spam!

AND MANY MANY THANKS!
Love,
AMIE

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

The New Girl Power?

Welcome to my blog, the news and muse of GlobalGirl, aka Amie Williams. I am an independent documentary filmmaker, activist and single Mom, living in Culver City, CA and usually dreaming about somwhere else...

Happy to write, not so happy to do it online, remember the doodle? But realize I have to get my act together and merge my soul with the internet. Started a new non-profit, Global Girl Media, which nurtures the voice and self-expression of young girls in developing nations with a goal to inspire and empower a future generation of citizen broadcast journalists around the world to speak out about the issues that effect them most. www.globalgirlmedia.org

Tired of seeing most media skewed to the male point of view, with woeful statistics on how many women are prominent in the current established media--both Hollywood and independent cinema is a disgrace.

Read with interest on the daily beast about how empowering women around the world seems to be coming (back into?) fashion http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-09-23/the-new-girl-power/?cid=tag:all4

But then this: women in Guinea peacefully protesting get gang- raped by men in military uniform. www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hZ75vxh7_wO7pFhdUOf-rcKYdi5Q

So stay tuned, as we build our network, reach out to readers like you. I will post thoughts, connections, travel diaries, links to videos I've done or rec. videos and films...reviews. It's all new to me, so please helps us reach the next generation of mediamakers, go global!

Amani Noma (peace is hard, in Swahili)...

GlobalGirl